McGregor sends Aldo a message after Brazilian’s crucial win

Conor McGregor has already sent a message to Jose Aldo, and he didn’t need a single word to convey it.

The Brazilian dismantled Frankie Edgar to become a UFC champion once more, claiming the interim featherweight title via unanimous decision at UFC 200 Saturday.

And the man Aldo will undoubtedly face next was stood stalking in the shadows of the Octagon, watching and waiting as a rival to his 145lbs throne emerged. Indeed, McGregor was the man UFC 200 wanted to forget after he was booted from the card for his reluctance to fulfil media obligations.

But with one icy-cold stare in the backdrop of Aldo’s victory, he sent a chilling reminder that he will be back. Of course, he is currently embroiled in another rivalry with Nate Diaz, which could come to a close at UFC 202 in August, but after that a rematch with the man he knocked out in 13 seconds will be next.

“Frankie’s a great competitor,” Aldo said after his win. “But I have one goal and it’s to beat this piece of **** (pointing at McGregor) and he can be sure that next time I catch him here he’s not going to be as lucky as he was the first time.”

While ‘The Answer’ was clearly the more active fighter, Aldo stayed on the backfoot and timed his counters to perfection, bloodying Edgar’s nose and controlling the fight. Just like in their first clash, at UFC 156, it went the full five rounds but in contrast the Brazilian did not fade in the later rounds, instead growing with confidence as he picked off a frustrated Edgar on his way to a vital victory.

“I was born to be the champion, if I’m the interim champion or whatever I was always the champion,” Aldo said. “If I get the fight next with him I’m going to still be the champion. I’m prepared and we can fight right now if we wanted to.”

Elsewhere, Daniel Cormier was bizarrely booed by those inside the T-Mobile Arena after he scored a one-sided win over Anderson Silva.

For a man who should have been considered a saviour of UFC 200, he was instead painted as a villain. The light-heavyweight champ was initially due to take on Jon Jones until the latter failed an out-of-competition drugs test. Cormier remained on the card and Brazilian legend Silva stepped up on two days notice. ‘DC’ used his smothering ground game to nullify the menacing striking of the middleweight great.

And clearly the fans were hoping for a more reckless strategy.

“I can’t really pay attention to that anymore,” he said of the boos. “People don’t understand the situation I had this week.”